I wish I had the LE error code. Anyway, I pulled this LG LDS5811ST dishwasher out of a friends house. She was tired of the LG issues (no repair person) or not returning calls. It is only 3 years old and thought I could clean the drains and jets and get it working. Problem is nothing seems to be clogged. I pulled the sump apart and checked the nozzle assemblies and everything seems to be clean. The problem she was having is that the dishes never got clean. Is this an easy fix or should I just gut the thing and convert it to a meat smoking cabinet?

I wish I had the LE error code. Anyway, I pulled this dishwasher out of a friends house. She was tired of the LG issues (no repair person) or not returning calls. It is only 3 years old and thought I could clean the drains and jets and get it working. Problem is nothing seems to be clogged. I pulled the sump apart and checked the nozzle assemblies and everything seems to be clean. The problem she was having is that the dishes never got clean. Is this an easy fix or should I just gut the thing and convert it to a meat smoking cabinet?

The older sump assembly wash motor can run at a lower rpm than it should--but sometimes not slow enough to trigger an "LE" error.In most cases--there'll be a chirping or grinding noise when the d/w is in the wash mode. This can be an intermittent noise or constant.

Alright, I just installed the new sump assembly and everything was working great until one of the pumping stages kicked in and it started puking water all over the floor. I tipped it back over and checked underneath and couldn't find anything disconnected or loose. The only thing that was wet was a little bit on the black hose that goes into the side of the sump (not the one near the corrugated drain hose). I noticed one of the tiny wires was stuck in the hose between the flange and the hose, so I removed that and reassembled it. Tried it again and got the same problem. This time it happened right away in "normal" mode. I tipped it back over and checked everything again and ran it in "quick cycle" it was bone dry until about 10min in when it went to a pumping stage and it started dumping water out again like crazy. Again, I tipped it back over and only saw a droplet of water on that same black hose. Am I missing something? I was going to go get some new hose clamps to replace the compression clamps on there and give it another try. I really want to avoid flooding my hardwood floor for a third time though. None of the sump assembly or anything else underneath is wet.

I got it figured out, it was the drain hose that was split up behind the side panel at the top of the looped return. No wonder I couldn't tell where it was coming from. I went to the hardware store and got a barbed fitting to connect the hose back together and put some shrink wrap over the top of all of it. Running another test cycle now and so far, so good. Only a could random drips off of the wet insulation and out of the bottom corners of the door. Probably water from tipping it on its side so many time when it wasn't fully drained.